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I'm wondering how can I create a function which calls all functions from the array without explicitly creating one. I'm talking about plain javascript (or maybe some underscore.js/lodash helpers, but I haven't found anything useful).

Let's say we have a method which takes a callback:

function doSmth(cb) {
  console.log('doing smth');
  cb();
}

Now we have three functions which we'd like to call, but we don't like to explicitly create a wrapper function.

function write1() {
  console.log(1)
}

function write2() {
  console.log(2)
}

function write3() {
  console.log(3)
}

Can we somehow reduce an array of [write1, write2, write3] to a single function? I've tried binding Function.prototype.call to Array.prototype.forEach but I didn't get anywhere.

Edit: I forgot to mention that we don't want to modify doSmth

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  • 2
    _.compose.apply(null, arrOfFns.reverse())(); ought to do it. Jul 1, 2016 at 15:53
  • You, sir, are pure genius :) But still it produces f(g(h())), which would mess with arguments, wondering if there's a way to call it f();g();h();
    – Selenir
    Jul 1, 2016 at 15:57
  • arr.reduce((p, x) => (() => { p(); x(); }), () => {}) in es6 Jul 1, 2016 at 16:01
  • @Selenir in that case see my answer. Jul 1, 2016 at 16:15

2 Answers 2

1

You can use forEach with a little helper function.

let invoke = (fn, ...args) => fn(...args);
arr.forEach(invoke);

// or for an array of the results
let results = arr.map(invoke);

// es5 translation of invoke
var invoke = function() {
  var fn = arguments[0];
  var args = [].slice.call(arguments, 1, arguments.length);
  return fn.apply(null, args);
};

let doIt = arr.forEach.bind(arr, invoke)
takesACallback(doIt);
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  • Okay but this simply invokes each function in a loop. I can't pass it as a callback to doSmth, can I?
    – Selenir
    Jul 1, 2016 at 16:18
  • @Selenir see my update. Realize you didn't want a wrapper, but hopefully you see how something generic like my invoke and extractethod functions have broader applicability. Jul 1, 2016 at 16:22
  • arr.map.bind(arr) produces an error, but arr.forEach.bind(arr, invoke) seems to work perfectly. You can edit your answer for future readers. Thanks for your help!
    – Selenir
    Jul 1, 2016 at 16:26
1

This is simple to do without a 3rd party library. You can pass all the functions you want ran as your callback in the doSmth function into a different function first that returns a function that loops through all the callbacks:

function doSmth(cb) {
  console.log('doing smth');
  cb();
}

function write1() {
  console.log(1)
}

function write2() {
  console.log(2)
}

function write3() {
  console.log(3)
}

function mergeManyCallbacks() {
  var fns = Array.from(arguments);
  return function() {
    fns.forEach(fn => {
      fn()
    })
  }
}

// here is your call to doSmth
doSmth(mergeManyCallbacks(write1, write2, write3))

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